35 comments

  • burnt-resistor 39 minutes ago

    We've heard the "biodegradable" greenwashing scam of plastic technology advances over and over again. Maybe we shouldn't be seeking continued use of toxic petrochemical processes and should instead change our storage and packaging materials to be less hazardous and more reusable, because many other options already exist.

    • 1minusp 23 minutes ago

      This. There seems to be one of these announcements every so often, and i havent seen any of them used at scale, or making any kind of dent in the status quo.

    • InDubioProRubio 12 minutes ago

      That will be 5 $ more per butterstick, for the logistics of reusable porcelain butter packages.. which have to be collected, washed and shipped. Which makes it a rich people feel good status-symbol luxury, sadly.

      • vhcr 6 minutes ago

        Or you know, supermarkets would purchase 50kg blocks of butter and fraction it, clients would then be responsible for bringing their own reusable containers.

  • modeless 8 hours ago

    > can be water stabilized with hydrophobic coatings

    So when they make takeout containers out of this it's going to be coated with... something. I am suspicious of all these coatings they're slapping on compostable food containers these days.

    • sfink 7 hours ago

      Well, even vegetable oil is hydrophobic, so "something" needn't be too horrible. (Oil would obviously wipe off too easily.)

      Apparently soybean wax works well: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7435775/

      Though not for hot foods. It'll only work up to 50°C.

      • burnt-resistor 37 minutes ago

        Borosilicate glass, metal, wood/bamboo/paper, ... there are many existing choices without looking for or inventing an impractical "flying car" option.

      • HeatrayEnjoyer 7 hours ago

        Or hot climates that reach >50 C

        • jajko 3 hours ago

          Or simple locked car on a sunny day (maybe not during winter), with dark interior. This can reach >90C over an hour or two.

          • KevinGlass 2 hours ago

            No car interior has ever reached 90C. Did you mean 90 F?

            • Retric 2 hours ago

              Overall temperature isn’t 90C but your lunch could be in contact with those temperatures:

              https://www.clickorlando.com/news/2019/09/26/heres-how-hot-t...

              “In a locked vehicle, a dark dashboard, steering wheel or seat can often reach temperature ranges of 180 - 200 degrees F, which then warms the air trapped inside a vehicle.” 194F is 90C.

              And that’s Florida, other parts of the globe have higher outdoor temperatures which result in higher internal temperatures.

            • inetknght an hour ago

              > No car interior has ever reached 90C.

              Ever seen a car on fire? I have.

              Ever seen a car on fire caused by heating from the sun? Well maybe not. But I have seen an egg get cooked on the roof of a car as a demonstration.

            • actionfromafar 2 hours ago

              Maybe not far off from 90, given you can fry eggs in open air in the sun and for that you need 65.

              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhYkUuvDsGA

            • burnt-resistor 36 minutes ago

              Have you ever been inside a hot car? Metal surfaces can easily exceed 100C.

        • thaumasiotes 5 hours ago

          There's no reason you'd ever worry about that; no one can use any object in such a climate, because they'd die.

          • HPsquared 4 hours ago

            People definitely live in places where it gets that hot. (And note that's the air temperature in the shade, not even surface temperatures in sunlight which can get much hotter).

            People survive because it's not 50°C all the time in those hot places. And the wet bulb temperature is lower, so sweating works (just about) to regulate body temperature. Mostly air conditioning and shelter, though.

          • latexr 3 hours ago
            • thaumasiotes 3 hours ago

              Those links aren't shy about explaining that people exposed to that level of heat die. Here's the first one:

              > According to a study recently published in Nature Medicine, more than 60 000 people died because of last year’s summer heatwaves across Europe.

              It's not necessary for your home food storage to be able to survive temperatures that you can't. If it happens to the food in your home, it will happen to you too.

              • latexr 2 hours ago

                People die with less heat. But clearly not everyone, and it is not true that:

                > no one can use any object in such a climate, because they'd die.

                By the way, I know you can survive that heat because I did. No air conditioner. It was excruciating and I don’t wish it upon anyone. Well, maybe on climate change deniers, it would probably do them some good to suffer through it to believe the science. They probably wouldn’t but at least they wouldn’t be able to move to make it worse, either.

      • ginko 4 hours ago

        There's also shellac.

        • burnt-resistor 34 minutes ago

          Soluble in alkali environments. No thanks.

    • dwallin 6 hours ago

      They specifically mention a coating in the abstract, parylene C.

    • blitzar 7 hours ago

      I am suspicious of the food in the takeout containers.

    • Terr_ 7 hours ago

      Perhaps some sort of food-grade wax? Although then you've got to worry about hot foods...

      • Mistletoe 6 hours ago

        My aunt got me a big wooden bowl in college and I was poor so I ate popcorn out of it. I noticed the popcorn tasted weird for quite some time. I finally put two and two together when the coating had all come off the bottom. The hot popcorn and oil had been removing the God knows what shiny finish and I had been eating it. :(

        • asquabventured an hour ago

          Hopefully just food grade mineral oil and beeswax if it was a wooden bowl.

          • Mistletoe 24 minutes ago

            It was one of those you might get at Pier 1 or Kohl’s back then and had a really plasticky coating. Not my best moment.

    • senectus1 8 hours ago

      laughs in PFAS

  • progre 5 hours ago

    > Plastics that can metabolize in oceans are highly sought for a sustainable future.

    Really? I think that putting more nutrients in the water is almost as bad as having plastics floating around. The Baltic sea for example, have dead zones caused by agricultural runoff.

    Surely, the best would be to not put more stuff in the water?

    • ruined 3 hours ago

      it is certainly good to not put more stuff in the water. i would suggest it is even better not to make stuff that shouldn't go in the water. but apparently a lot has already been made and there's constantly more of it in the water, and it looks like nobody is stopping

      so if some major fraction of present production of that shit that shouldn't go in the water can be eliminated, and satisfied by an alternative that is not a persistent accumulating poison, i'll take it

    • graemep 3 hours ago

      Depends on what you put in, how much, and where.

      I do not think moderate quantities of nutrients are a problem, and very likely has benefits.

      • emilamlom 36 minutes ago

        What the other commenter is alluding to is that, if this comes into widespread use, it won't just be a moderate amount. We produce mind-boggling amounts of plastic waste and a lot of it would concentrate in rivers and estuaries.

    • pfdietz 3 hours ago

      The natural input of "nutrients" to the ocean is vast, compared to the natural input of modern artificial plastics.

    • relaxing 4 hours ago

      Well yeah but good luck with that.

  • XorNot 7 hours ago

    Interesting that this is a thermoplastic - my first question is how it performs as a 3D printer filament?